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属类: 双语小说 【分类】魔幻小说 -[作者: 路易斯] 阅读:[7901]
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9、纳尼亚的诞生

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狮子唱着新歌,在空旷的大地上走来走去。这歌声比刚才唤起星星和太阳的歌声更柔和,更轻快活泼,是一曲如潺潺流水般温暖的乐声。随着它的移动和歌唱,河谷里长出青青碧草,从狮子身边像水潭一样蔓延开去,又如浪花一般爬到小山坡上。一会儿,青草就长上了远处大山的斜坡,年轻的世界每一瞬间都变得更加柔美。徽风沙沙地拂动青草。很快,除了草,又出现了别的东西。高高的山坡上长出了颜色暗淡的石南属植物,河谷里旨出了一片片毛茬茬的粗糙不平的绿色。迪格雷刚开始不知道是什么,直到其中一个来到离他很近的地方。那是一种长而尖的小东西,身上长出几十支手臂,上面班盖着绿色之物,而且以每两秒钟一寸的速度增大。现在他的周围到处都有这样的东西。等它们长到与他高度相似时,他才恍然大悟地喊道“树!”

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令人沮丧的是,正如波莉以后说的,你无法安安静静地观赏这一切。迪格雷说“树”的同时,他不得不跳到一边,因为安德鲁舅舅又悄悄溜到他身旁,企图偷他的戒指。即使他偷到手也没有多大好处,因为他一直以为绿戒指管返回,便把目标对准右边口袋。当然,迪格雷也不想让他得逞。

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“住手”

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女巫大叫,“站回去。不准往前走。谁要是走到离这两个小孩中的任何一个十步远的地方,我就敲碎他的脑袋。”她挥舞着那根从灯柱上扭下来的铁棒,随时准备扔出去。不管怎么说,人人都相信她会扔得很准。

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“好哇,”她说,“你想带着这男孩偷偷跑回你们的世界,而把我留在这儿。”

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安德鲁舅舅终于不怕她了,忍不住发了火。“是的,夫人,”他说,“豪无疑问,我就想这么干。这完全是我的权力。我蒙受了最大的羞辱,受到了最低等的待遇。我曾经尽全力尊敬你,讨好你,但我得到的报答是什么呢?你抢劫————我一定要重复这两个字一——抢劫了受人尊敬的珠宝商。你坚持要我招待你最昂贵(不用说也是最铺张)的午餐。这样一来,我不得不当掉手表和表链(告诉你,夫人,我们家还没谁有经常光顾当铺的习惯,除了我的表哥爱德华,他参加过义勇骑兵队)。吃那顿消化不了的午饭时―——

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现在想起来我更难受了―—— 你的言行骚扰了在座的每一个人。我觉得自己在公众场合丢了脸。以后,我再没有脸去那个饭店了。你袭击警察察,还愉了―——”

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“别说了,先生,请别说了。”马车夫说,“看一看、听一听眼前发生的事吧,不要讲话。”

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值得看和值得听的实在太多了。迪格雷最先看见的那棵树己经长成一棵粗壮的山毛榉,枝丫优美地在他头顶上舒展。他们站立的那片凉爽的青草地上散布着雏菊和毛莨属植物。稍远的地方,沿河生长着柳树。河的对岸,绽放着一丛丛茶藨子、丁香花、野玫瑰和杜鹃花。那匹马大口大口地撕咬着新鲜的草。,

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在这段时间里,狮子一直不停地唱着歌,庄严地前后左右走动。使人惊异的是,它每次转身,都离他们更近一些。波莉发现,歌声越来越有趣,因为她觉得自己开始看出了音乐与眼前发生的事之间的联系。当大约百米外的山脊上跳出一排墨绿色的冷杉树时,她感到这和一秒钟前狮子唱的一组低沉、悠长的音调紧密相关。豪不奇怪,随着狮了唱出一组轻快的旋律,她看到报春花从四面八方长了出来。在一阵无以言表的激动中,她肯定所有这些都是从(用她的话说)

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“狮子脑袋里出来的”。当你聆听它歌唱时,你就听见了它所创造的事物:当你环顾四周,你就能看见这些事物。这太令人激动了,她无暇感到害怕。但狮子每一次转身离他们更近时,迪格雷和马车夫都不禁有些紧张,安德鲁舅舅则牙齿打战,双膝发抖,根本跑不掉了。

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突然,女巫大胆地朝狮子冲过去。狮子仍然唱着歌,缓慢而沉稳地前进,只有十几步远了。她抬起手臂,朝着它的头将铁棒直直地抛了过去。

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任何,更不用说简蒂丝,都不会在这么近的距离打偏。铁棒不偏不倚地敲在狮子的两眼之间,然后一掠而过,砰的一声落在草中。但狮子没有停下,步伐既未减慢也未增快,很难说它是否知道自己被打了一下。虽然它柔软的爪子没发出任何声响,你却能感到大地在它的脚下震颇。

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女巫尖叫一声跑开了,很快便消头在树林中。安德鲁舅舅转身想跟着跑,不料绊倒在一根树桩上,脸朝下倒在流向大河的一条小溪中。孩子们无法动弹。他们甚至不能肯定自己是否想跑。狮子根本没有注意他们。它张着血红的大口,没有咆哮,只是歌唱。它与他们擦身而过,他们可以摸到它的皮毛。两人害怕极了,怕它转过身看着自己。但奇怪的是,他们又希望它转过身来。从开始到现在.他们好像是看不见闻不着的东西,丝豪没有引起它的注意。它从他们身边过去,走了几步,又折回来,两次与他们擦身而过,转向东去。安德鲁舅舅爬起来,边咳嗽边唾沫飞溅地说:“迪格雷,我们终于摆脱了那个女人,狮子也走了,快把手伸过来,马上戴好戒指。”

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“走开。”迪格雷说着,后退几步避开他,“离他远点儿,波莉,到我身边来。我现在警告你,安德鲁舅舅,一步也不要走近,否则,我们就走了。”

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“立刻照我说的做,老兄,“安德鲁舅舅说,”你这孩子太调皮捣蛋,表现很不好。”

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“不走,”迪格雷说,“我们要呆在这儿看会发生什么事。我原来以为你想了解别的世界。现在到了这儿,你不喜欢这地方吗?

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“喜欢”,安德鲁舅舅大叫,“看看我落到了什么地步!这还是我最好的外套和背心呢。”他现在看上去的确很狼狈。当然,你开始时打扮得越漂亮,从撞烂的马车下钻出来再掉进一条泥泞的小溪,模样就越惨不忍睹。“我不是说,”他接着说道,“这个地方没有意思。如果我年轻一些,现在―——

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我或许可以先去找一个精力充沛的青年到这儿来。找一个专猎大动物的猎手。这个地方有些好处可以利用。这儿天气宜人。我过去从来没有感受过这样的空气。我相信,这对我是有好处的,如果―——

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如果条件比较有利。要是我们有枝枪就好了。”

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“枪也没用,”马车夫说,“我想我要去看看是不是该给‘草莓’梳理一下了。那匹马比有些人还有灵性。”他走到‘草莓’身边,嘴里发出马车夫特有的那种嘘嘘声。

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“你还认为那头狮子能被枪打死吗,”迪格雷说,“它对那根铁棒不怎么在乎。”

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“这全是她的错,”安德鲁舅舅说,“那胆大包天的姑娘,我的孩子。她太粗暴了。”他的指关节捏得噼啪作晌,似乎又忘了只要女巫在场自己是如何害怕的。

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“这么做实在太坏了,”波莉说,“狮子哪一点伤害她了?”

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“悔!那是什么?”迪格雷说完往前走,去查看几步外的一样东西。“我说,波莉,”他向后喊道,“过来看看。”安德鲁舅舅也跟着过来了,他不是好奇,而是想紧跟孩了们一这样就有可能偷到戒指。但是,当他看见迪格雷正在看的东西时,也开始感兴趣了。那是一个小巧而完美的灯柱模型.在他们看的时候,它正在按比例变高变宽。实际上,它像树木一样存生长。

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“它是活的―——

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我是说,它亮着。”迪格雷说。不过,当然哆,在阳光下,除非你遮住它,灯上徽弱的光线几乎是看不见的。

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“了不起,太了不起了,”安德鲁舅舅喃喃地说,“我连做梦也不会想会有这样的魔法。这个世界,所有的东西甚至一个灯杜,都是有生命的,可以生长。我觉得奇怪的是,什么种子可以长成一个灯柱?”

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“你还不明白?”迪格雷说,“这是铁棒掉下去的地方一一她从我们家门前那根灯柱上扭下的铁棒。它掉进土里就长成了一个小灯柱。”但此刻已经不算小了,迪格雷说这话时,灯柱已和他一样高了。(

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“是的,了不起,了不起!

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”安德鲁舅舅比刚才更加起劲地捍着手指,“哦!哦!他们嘲笑我的魔法。我那傻瓜妹妹以为我是个疯子。这下,看他们还说什么?我已经发现一个充满生机、任何东西都可以生长的世界。哥伦布,他们现在谈论哥伦布。但与这里相比,美洲算什么,这个国家商业上的潜力是不可限量的。带一些旧钢条到这儿来,埋下去,就会长出崭新的火车头、军舰,或者任何你想要的东西。用不着花任何代价,我就能以高价在英国卖掉。这样我将会成为一个百万富翁。还有这天气!我已经感到自己年轻了二十岁,我可以在这里经营一个疗养胜地,弄好了,一年就可以挣两万。当然,我只会让极少数人知道这个秘密。首先要打死那头畜生。”

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“你和女巫一样,”波莉说.“满脑子都是屠杀。”

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“然后,再说自己,”安德每舅舅继续做着美梦,“如果我定居在这儿,天知道能活多久。对一个年过花甲的人来说,这是值得考虑的头等大事。在这里,我当然永远不会老。实是太美了!年轻的土地啊!”

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“哦!”迪格雷大喊,“年轻的土地!你认为真的是呜?”

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他自然记得,蕾蒂姨妈对那个送葡萄的女人说过的话。共好的愿望在他的脑海中闪现出来。“安德鲁舅舅,”他说,“你认为这儿有什么可以治好妈妈的病吗? ”

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“你在说什么?”安德鲁舅舅说,“这儿不是药店。但就像我说的… … ”

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“你一点儿也不关心她,”迪格雷气愤地说,“我还以为你会的;毕竞她是我的母亲,是你的妹妹。不过没关系。我去问狮子看它能不能帮忙。”然后他转过身,轻快地走了。波莉迟疑一下也跟着去了。

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“晦!停下!回来!这孩子疯了。”

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安德鲁舅舅说。他小心翼翼地跟在孩子们后面,保持着一段距离。因为他既不想远离绿戒指,也不想靠近狮子。

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几分钟后,迪格雷走到树林边上,站住了。狮子仍在歌唱。但歌声又变了。这次的歌声与我们所说的“调子”更为相似,但依然狂放不羁,使你想跳,想跑,想攀登,想大喊大叫,想冲向他人,拥抱他们或与他们搏斗。迪格雷听得脸上通红发热。安德鲁舅舅似乎也受了影晌,因为迪格雷听见他说:“一个活泼的姑娘,老兄。她的脾气令人遗憾,但总的来说,是个漂亮的女人,一个漂亮的女人。”然而,歌声对这两个人产生的效果根本无法与它对这片上地产生的效果相比。

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你能想像一块草地像壶里的水一样沸腾吗,但这样描述正存发生的事是最最恰当的。周围的草地膨胀成个个大小不同的圆丘,有的只有鼹鼠丘那么大,有的和独轮小车相差无几,其中两个与小棚屋一般大小。这些圆丘移动着,膨胀着,直到泥土四溅地炸开后,每个圆丘里都钻出一样动物。鼹鼠出来时与你在英国见的鼹鼠出洞一模一样。狗一伸出脑袋就汪汪地叫,像从篱笆的窄缝里钻过时那样挣扎着。雄鹿是最有趣的,因为它们的角比只他部分先出来很长时间,所以,一开始迪格雷以为是树。青蛙从河岸边钻出来后,就呱呱地叫着,一蹦一蹦地跳到河里去了。花豹、黑豹一类的动物马上坐下来,将后腿上沾的松土抖掉,然后站起身,在树上磨前爪。林中传来阵阵鸟鸣。蜜蜂一秒钟也不愿耽误就在花上忙开了。但最壮观的时刻是当最大的圆丘像轻度地震一样炸裂开时,从里而隆起大象斜坡般的脊背、聪明的大脑袋和四条像穿着宽松裤子一般的大腿。现在,你几乎听不见狮子的歌唱了,四面八方,满耳的牛叫、马嘶、犬吠、鸟鸣…

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虽然迪格雷听不见狮子唱歌了,但仍然能看见它。它那么高大,那么明亮,将他牢牢地吸引住了。其他动物似乎也不怕它。就在这时,他听见阵马蹄声,那匹拉车的老马小跑右从他身边过去,和其他动物站到一起了(空气适合安德鲁舅舅也适合它,它看上去不再像伦敦街头可怜的老奴隶,它正扬起腿,高昂着头。)这时,狮子第一次安静下来。它在动物中巡视一番,时不时走到其中的两个面前(每次总是两个),用它的鼻子吻它们的鼻子:在花豹中挑出两头,在鹿群中挑出一头雄鹿和一头雌鹿,将其他的撇在一边。对有些种类的动物,它只是走过而已;但它吻过的动物成双成对地离开白己的群体,跟在它后面。最后,它站住了,它挑出来的动物也走过来,围着它站成一圈。它没有吻过的动物开始四下散开,叫声逐渐消失在远方。它选出来的那些动物静静地站着,所有的眼睛都紧紧地盯着狮子。猫类动物偶尔摇摇尾巴,其他的动物全都一动也不动。那天,第一次这么寂静,只听见淙淙的流水声。迪格雷的心在猛烈地跳动,他知道神圣而庄严的事情就要发生了。他已经忘了妈妈。但他非常清楚,即使为了她,他也不能打扰这样的大事。

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不曾眨过眼的狮子用它那灼人的目光凝视着动物们。逐渐,那些动物起了变化。小动物一如兔子、睡鼠等―——大了许多。庞大的动物-―

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这一点从大象身上最能看出来一——小了一些。许多动物用后腿坐着,其中大多数都偏着头,似乎在努力地试着理解什么。狮子张着嘴,却没有发声。

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像风刮起一排树一样,它呼出的绵长而温暖的气息可以将所有的动物都席卷而去。头上,遥远的空中,躲在蓝色天幕后面的星星又开始了新的歌唱。那是一种纯洁、清冷而难以理解的音乐。接着,从天上或狮子身上闪出一股火光。孩子们的每一滴血都沸腾起来。一个从未听到过的最低沉最粗犷的声音说道:

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“纳尼亚,纳尼亚,纳尼亚,醒来吧。去爱,去想,去说话。让树能走动,让野兽说话,还有神圣的水。”

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THE FOUNDING OF NARNIA

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THE Lion was pacing to and fro about that empty land and singing his new song. It was softer and more lilting than the song by which he had called up the stars and the sun; a gentle, rippling music. And as he walked and sang the valley grew green with grass. It spread out from the Lion like a pool. It ran up the sides of the little hills like a wave. In a few minutes it was creeping up the lower slopes of the distant mountains, making that young world every moment softer. The light wind could now be heard ruffling the grass. Soon there were other things besides grass. The higher slopes grew dark with heather. Patches of rougher and more bristling green appeared in the valley. Digory did not know what they were until one began coming up quite close to him. It was a little, spiky thing that threw out dozens of arms and covered these arms with green and grew larger at the rate of about an inch every two seconds. There were dozens of these things all round him now. When they were nearly as tall as himself he saw what they were. "Trees!" he exclaimed.

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The nuisance of it, as Polly said afterwards, was that you weren’t left in peace to watch it all. Just as Digory said "Trees!" he had to jump because Uncle Andrew had sidled up to him again and was going to pick his pocket. It wouldn’t have done Uncle Andrew much good if he had succeeded, for he was aiming at the right-hand pocket because he still thought the green rings were "homeward" rings. But of course Digory didn’t want to lose either.

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"Stop!" cried the Witch. "Stand back. No, further back. If anyone goes within ten paces of either of the children, I will knock out his brains." She was poising in her hand the iron bar that she had torn off the lamp-post, ready to throw it. Somehow no one doubted that she would be a very good shot.

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"So!" -she said. "You would steal back to your own world with the boy and leave me here."

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Uncle Andrew’s temper at last got the better of his fears. "Yes, Ma’am, I would," he said. "Most undoubtedly I would. I should be perfectly in my rights. I have been most shamefully, most abominably treated. I have done my best to show you such civilities as were in my power. And what has been my reward? You have robbed - I must repeat the word robbed a highly respectable jeweller. You have insisted on my entertaining you to an exceedingly expensive, not to say ostentatious, lunch, though I was obliged to pawn my watch and chain in order to do so (and let me tell you, Ma’am, that none of our family have been in the habit of frequenting pawnshops, except my cousin Edward, and he was in the Yeomanry). During that indigestible meal - I’m feeling the worse for it at this very moment - your behaviour and conversation attracted the unfavourable attention of everyone present. I feel I have been publicly disgraced. I shall never be able to show my face in that restaurant again. You have assaulted the police. You have stolen -"

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"Oh stow it, Guv’nor, do stow it," said the Cabby. "Watchin’ and listenin’s the thing at present; not talking."

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There was certainly plenty to watch and to listen to. The tree which Digory had noticed was now a full-grown beech whose branches swayed gently above his head. They stood on cool, green grass, sprinkled with daisies and buttercups. A little way off, along the river bank, willows were growing. On the other side tangles of flowering currant, lilac, wild rose, and rhododendron closed them in. The horse was tearing up delicious mouthfuls of new grass.

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All this time the Lion’s song, and his stately prowl, to and fro, backwards and forwards, was going on. What was rather alarming was that at each turn he came a little nearer. Polly was finding the song more and more interesting because she thought she was beginning to see the connection between the music and the things that were happening. When a line of dark firs sprang up on a ridge about a hundred yards away she felt that they were connected with a series of deep, prolonged notes which the Lion had sung a second before. And when he burst into a rapid series of lighter notes she was not surprised to see primroses suddenly appearing in every direction. Thus, with an unspeakable thrill, she felt quite certain that all the things were coming (as she said) "out of the Lion’s head". When you listened to his song you heard the things he was making up: when you looked round you, you saw them. This was so exciting that she had no time to be afraid. But Digory and the Cabby could not help feeling a bit nervous as each turn of the Lion’s walk brought him nearer. As for Uncle Andrew, his teeth were chattering, but his knees were shaking so that he could not run away.

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Suddenly the Witch stepped boldly out towards the Lion. It was coming on, always singing, with a slow, heavy pace. It was only twelve yards away. She raised her arm and flung the iron bar straight at its head.

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Nobody, least of all Jadis, could have missed at that range. The bar struck the Lion fair between the eyes. It glanced off and fell with a thud in the grass. The Lion came on. Its walk was neither slower nor faster than before; you could not tell whether it even knew it had been hit. Though its soft pads made no noise, you could feel the earth shake beneath their weight.

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The Witch shrieked and ran: in a few moments she was out of sight among the trees. Uncle Andrew turned to do likewise, tripped over a root, and fell flat on his face in a little brook that ran down to join the river. The children could not move. They were not even quite sure that they wanted to. The Lion paid no attention to them. Its huge red mouth was open, but open in song not in a snarl. It passed by them so close that they could have touched its mane. They were terribly afraid it would turn and look at them, yet in some queer way they wished it would. But for all the notice it took of them they might just as well have been invisible and unsmellable. When it had passed them and gone a few paces further it turned, passed them again, and continued its march eastward.

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Uncle Andrew, coughing and spluttering, picked himself up.

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"Now, Digory," he said, "we’ve got rid of that woman, and the brute of a lion is gone. Give me your hand and put on your ring at once."

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"Keep off," said Digory, backing away from him. "Keep clear of him, Polly. Come over here beside me. Now I warn you, Uncle Andrew, don’t come one step nearer, we’ll just vanish."

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"Do what you’re told this minute, sir," said Uncle Andrew. "You’re an extremely disobedient, ill-behaved little boy."

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"No fear," said Digory. "We want to stay and see what happens. I thought you wanted to know about other worlds. Don’t you like it now you’re here?"

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"Like it!" exclaimed Uncle Andrew. "Just look at the state I’m in. And it was my best coat and waistcoat, too." He certainly was a dreadful sight by now: for of course, the more dressed up you were to begin with, the worse you look after you’ve crawled out of a smashed hansoncab and fallen into a muddy brook. "I’m not saying," he added, "that this is not a most interesting place. If I were a younger man, now - perhaps I could get some lively young fellow to come here first. One of those big-game hunters. Something might be made of this country. The climate is delightful. I never felt such air. I believe it would have done me good if - if circumstances had been more favourable. If only we’d had a gun."

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"Guns be blowed," said the Cabby. "I think I’ll go and see if I can give Strawberry a rub down. That horse ’as more sense than some ’umans as I could mention." He walked back to Strawberry and began making the hissing noises that grooms make.

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"Do you still think that Lion could be killed by a gun?" asked Digory. "He didn’t mind the iron bar much."

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"With all her faults," said Uncle Andrew, "that’s a plucky gel, my boy. It was a spirited thing to do." He rubbed his hands and cracked his knuckles, as if he were once more forgetting how the Witch frightened him whenever she was really there.

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"It was a wicked thing to do," said Polly. "What harm had he done her?"

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"Hullo! What’s that?" said Digory. He had darted forward to examine something only a few yards away. "I say, Polly," he called back. "Do come and look."

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Uncle Andrew came with her; not because he wanted to see but because he wanted to keep close to the children there might be a chance of stealing their rings. But when he saw what Digory was looking at, even he began to take an interest. It was a perfect little model of a lamp-post, about three feet high but lengthening, and thickening in proportion, as they watched it; in fact growing just as the trees had grown.

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"It’s alive too - I mean, it’s lit," said Digory. And so it was; though of course, the brightness of the sun made the little flame in the lantern hard to see unless your shadow fell on it.

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"Remarkable, most remarkable," muttered Uncle Andrew. "Even I never dreamt of Magic like this. We’re in a world where everything, even a lamp-post, comes to life and grows. Now I wonder what sort of seed a lamppost grows from?"

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"Don’t you see?" said Digory. "This is where the bar fell - the bar she tore off the lamp-post at home. It sank into the ground and now it’s coming up as a young lamppost." (But not so very young now; it was as tall as Digory while he said this.)

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"That’s it! stupendous, stupendous," said Uncle Andrew, rubbing his hands harder than ever. "Ho, ho! They laughed at my Magic. That fool of a sister of mine thinks I’m a lunatic. I wonder what they’ll say now? I have discovered a world where everything is bursting with life and growth. Columbus, now, they talk about Columbus. But what was America to this? The commercial possibilities of this country are unbounded. Bring a few old bits of scrap iron here, bury ’em, and up they come as brand new railway engines, battleships, anything you please. They’ll cost nothing, and I can sell ’em at full prices in England. I shall be a millionaire. And then the climate! I feel years younger already. I can run it as a health resort. A good sanatorium here might be worth twenty thousand a year. Of course I shall have to let a few people into the secret. The first thing is to get that brute shot."

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"You’re just like the Witch," said Polly. "All you think of is killing things."

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"And then as regards oneself," Uncle Andrew continued, in a happy dream. "There’s no knowing how long I might live if I settled here. And that’s a big consideration when a fellow has turned sixty. I shouldn’t be surprised if I never grew a day older in this country! Stupendous! The land of youth!"

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"Oh!" cried Digory. "The land of youth! Do you think it really is?" For of course he remembered what Aunt Letty had said to the lady who brought the grapes, and that sweet hope rushed back upon him. "Uncle Andrew", he said, "do you think there’s anything here that would cure Mother?"

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"What are you talking about?" said Uncle Andrew. "This isn’t a chemist’s shop. But as I was saying -"

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"You don’t care twopence about her," said Digory  savagely. "I thought you might;  after all, she’s your sister as well as  my Mother. Well, no matter. I’m  jolly well going to ask the Lion  himself if he can help me." And he turned and walked briskly away. Polly waited for a moment and then went after him.

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"Here! Stop! Come back! The boy’s gone mad," said Uncle Andrew. He followed the children at a cautious distance behind; for he didn’t want to get too far away from the green rings or too near the Lion.

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In a few minutes Digory came to the edge of the wood and there he stopped. The Lion was singing still. But now the song had once more changed. It was more like what we should call a tune, but it was also far wilder. It made you want to run and jump and climb. It made you want to shout. It made you want to rush at other people and either hug them or fight them. It made Digory hot and red in the face. It had some effect on Uncle Andrew, for Digory could hear him saying, "A spirited gel, sir. It’s a pity about her temper, but a dem fine woman all the same, a dem fine woman." But what the song did to the two humans was nothing compared with what it was doing to the country.

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Can you imagine a stretch of grassy land bubbling like water in a pot? For that is really the best description of what was happening. In all directions it was swelling into humps. They were of very different sizes, some no bigger than mole-hills, some as big as wheel-barrows, two the size of cottages. And the humps moved and swelled till they burst, and the crumbled earth poured out of them, and from each hump there came out an animal. The moles came out just as you might see a mole come out in England. The dogs came out, barking the moment their heads were free, and struggling as you’ve seen them do when they are getting through a narrow hole in a hedge. The stags were the queerest to watch, for of course the antlers came up a long time before the rest of them, so at first Digory thought they were trees. The frogs, who all came up near the river, went straight into it with a plop-plop and a loud croaking. The panthers, leopards and things of that sort, sat down at once to wash the loose earth off their hind quarters and then stood up against the trees to sharpen their front claws. Showers of birds came out of the trees. Butterflies fluttered. Bees got to work on the flowers as if they hadn’t a second to lose. But the greatest moment of all was when the biggest hump broke like a small earthquake and out came the sloping back, the large, wise head, and the four baggy-trousered legs of an elephant. And now you could hardly hear the song of the Lion; there was so much cawing, cooing, crowing, braying, neighing, baying, barking, lowing, bleating, and trumpeting.

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But though Digory could no longer hear the Lion, he could see it. It was so big and so bright that he could not take his eyes off it. The other animals did not appear to be afraid of it. Indeed, at that very moment, Digory heard the sound of hoofs from behind; a second later the old cab-horse trotted past him and joined the other beasts. (The air had apparently suited him as well as it had suited Uncle Andrew. He no longer looked like the poor, old slave he had been in London; he was picking up his feet and holding his head erect.) And now, for the first time, the Lion was quite silent. He was going to and fro among the animals. And every now and then he would go up to two of them (always two at a time) and touch their noses with his. He would touch two beavers among all the beavers, two leopards among all the leopards, one stag and one deer among all the deer, and leave the rest. Some sorts of animal he passed over altogether. But the pairs which he had touched instantly left their own kinds and followed him. At last he stood still and all the creatures whom he had touched came and stood in a wide circle around him. The others whom he had not touched began to wander away. Their noises faded gradually into the distance. The chosen beasts who remained were now utterly silent, all with their eyes fixed intently upon the Lion. The cat-like ones gave an occasional twitch of the tail but otherwise all were still. For the first time that day there was complete silence, except for the noise of running water. Digory’s heart beat wildly; he knew something very solemn was going to be done. He had not forgotten about his Mother; but he knew jolly well that, even for her, he couldn’t interrupt a thing like this.

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The Lion, whose eyes never blinked, stared at the animals as hard as if he was going to burn them up with his mere stare. And gradually a change came over them. The smaller ones - the rabbits, moles and such-like grew a good deal larger. The very big ones - you noticed it most with the elephants - grew a little smaller. Many animals sat up on their hind legs. Most put their heads on one side as if they were trying very hard to understand. The Lion opened his mouth, but no sound came from it; he was breathing out, a long, warm breath; it seemed to sway all the beasts as the wind sways a line of trees. Far overhead from beyond the veil of blue sky which hid them the stars sang again; a pure, cold, difficult music. Then there came a swift flash like fire (but it burnt nobody) either from the sky or from the Lion itself, and every drop of blood tingled in the children’s bodies, and the deepest, wildest voice they had ever heard was saying:

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"Narnia, Narnia, Narnia, awake. Love. Think. Speak. Be walking trees. Be talking beasts. Be divine waters."

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